EPILOGUE
APRIL 1, 2010
THURSDAY, 10:49 a.m.
NEW YORK CITY
THURSDAY, 10:49 a.m.
NEW YORK CITY
Detective Captain Lou Soldano surprised
himself by finding a legal parking place on Laurie and Jack’s
street just two doors away from their house. Both had taken an
indefinite leave of absence from OCME after the trauma of John
Junior’s short but emotionally traumatic kidnapping. Although Lou
had not seen them face-to-face since that fateful Friday, he had
spoken with them on the phone on several occasions, the last time
being the previous evening when Lou had set up the current meeting
for today. Until now, he had felt they needed their privacy.
After climbing the five steps to the stoop and
ringing the bell, Lou checked his watch. It was now ten minutes
before the onset of the raids, which were going to occur
simultaneously at their three separate locations. The knowledge
that they were about to take place gave Lou a great sense of
satisfaction as well as excitement. At the same time, he felt a bit
badly about not participating, but since there was no way he could
be at all three locations at once, he’d decided to be at none and
celebrate their occurrence with Laurie, since she was most
responsible for the raids taking place. It had been a combination
of her intuition, doggedness, and investigative forensic
intelligence that had made her see a homicide where others saw a
natural death. She had been the one to connect the homicide to
organized crime—specifically, the working relationship existing
between the Mafia and the Japanese Yakuza.
The door opened, and Jack and Lou greeted each
other warmly. “You don’t have to schedule a formal visit,” Jack
admonished as they climbed the stairs. “You can always just drop
in.”
“Under the circumstances, I thought it best to
call,” Lou explained. “Kidnappings are rather unique emotional
events, to say the least. How is everybody doing?”
“Everybody is doing fine, except for me,” Jack
joked. “JJ seemed entirely normal as soon as he woke up from his
anesthetic, and has been normal ever since, provided you believe
the behavior of a normal one-and-a-half-year-old is normal.”
“I vaguely remember,” Lou said. Both his kids
were out of college.
“The only problem is that Laurie continues to
blame herself for the kidnapping episode, no matter what anyone
says. And now she’s having this internal battle about whether she
wants to be a full-time mom or a mom who also happens to be a
world-class medical examiner. Please talk to her. I can’t, because
I’m happy either way. I want her to do what she wants to do.”
They passed the kitchen and walked into the
family room. Laurie got up from the couch and gave Lou a sustained
hug, thanking him profusely for suggesting that they use Grover and
Colt of CRT.
“It made all the difference in the world,” Laurie
said, tears coming to her eyes and embarrassing Lou in the
process.
“I just thought they could get JJ back faster,”
Lou mumbled, trying to downplay his role in the affair.
“Faster!” Laurie blurted. “They got him back the
very next day. It was like a miracle. If they’d not helped us, I’m
convinced JJ would still be in the hands of the kidnappers.”
“No doubt,” Lou said. “Did Grover and Colt
confirm to you why JJ was snatched?”
“No, we only spoke to them once, and that was on
Monday. They called briefly, just to check in on JJ. We haven’t
spoken to them since, because they told us they were off on a case
in Venezuela that very evening.”
“Just as they had guessed, the kidnapping was
done as a late, desperate effort to deter you from working on the
Satoshi Machita case. Any ransom demand was going to be mere icing
on the cake. They were afraid of you, Laurie, not OCME in general,
just you.”
“That’s hard to believe,” Laurie said.
“And it doesn’t speak very well for the rest of
us at OCME,” Jack said, trying to inject an element of humor. Jack
bent down and picked up JJ, who felt ignored by the grown-ups and
was letting everyone know.
“It might seem hard to believe to you, Laurie,”
Lou said, “but not to those in the NYPD, the FBI, CIA, and Secret
Service. Your recent work with the Satoshi Machita case combined
with JJ’s kidnapping resulted in the formation of the most
efficient task force I’ve ever been part of. Since Sunday, this
task force has accomplished months’ worth of highly successful
investigation, such that . . .”
Lou paused to look at his watch. It was three
minutes before eleven.
“Such that what?” Laurie questioned.
“This is super-secret,” Lou said, lowering his
voice for effect, “but in two minutes at three locations,
representatives of the four agencies I just mentioned will be
raiding three private companies: iPS USA, headed by Benjamin Corey;
Dominick’s Financial Services, headed by Vincent Dominick; and
Pacific Rim Wealth Management, headed by Saboru Fukuda. All
computers, storage devices, and documents will be confiscated, and
all the principals will be arrested, including CEOs, CFOs, COOs.
This is going to be a big deal. I can feel it in my bones. It’s
going to have a big effect on Mob cooperation with the Japanese
Yakuza, if it doesn’t sever it completely. It’ll seriously reduce
the ballooning crystal meth problem here in the Big Apple. Thank
you, Laurie. You are an asset to the city, so when you consider
whether you want to be just a mom or a mom with a career, please
keep in mind that you will be sorely missed if you choose the
former.”
Laurie glared at Jack, feigning anger. “Have you
been talking about me?”
“I always talk about you,” Jack confessed,
holding up his hands in mock surrender. “But I assure you I had
zero input into Lou’s assessment.”

FBI Special Agent Gene Stackhouse had been
selected as the overall leader of the task force comprising
representatives of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Central
Intelligence Agency, the Secret Service, and the New York City
Police Department. He, like the other agents except for the group
from the NYPD, was dressed in a dark blue uniform with black
lettering indicating his agency. Most carried weapons, either
Glocks or M15 rifles. The NYPD agents, all SWAT team members, were
dressed in the usual black and carried a wider variety of
firepower. Everyone wore helmets and bulletproof vests. Everyone
had been fully briefed and were impatient for the word “go!”
Special Agent Stackhouse was particularly wired
and ready to explode into the highly choreographed activity he’d
planned the moment the second hand of his chronograph reached
twelve. The start time was to be exactly eleven o’clock a.m. at all
three sites to eliminate any chance of one company calling another
to hide evidence.
“Masks on!” he yelled, as the second hand of his
watch passed three. A small microphone clipped to his shoulder
epaulet flap conveyed his voice to all nine unmarked vans: three at
each location, with six people in each van, for a total of
fifty-four law-enforcement officers.
Gene Stackhouse was in the passenger seat of the
first van at his location, which was on the left side of Fifth
Avenue just north of 57th Street. The two other vans were directly
behind. When the second hand swept past the number eleven, he
counted: “ten, nine, eight . . .” He unsnapped his holstered Glock
pistol. “Four, three, two, one. Go!” All four doors of the three
vans sprang open, shocking the various pedestrians on Fifth Avenue.
The team dashed across the wide sidewalk, threw open the doors of
the building where iPS USA was quartered, and swarmed the security
desk. The guards were ordered not to communicate with any of the
building’s tenants, particularly iPS USA.
“What’s going on?” one of the building security
guards demanded, trying to sound authoritative. He’d been impressed
and terrified at seeing the intruders’ firepower but relieved when
he saw FBI, SECRET SERVICE, CIA, and NYPD on the backs of
jackets.
“We are executing a number of warrants.”
Stackhouse yelled, directing his men toward a waiting elevator.
“Remain seated! No talking! No phoning!” Snapping his fingers
toward a CIA agent, Stackhouse directed him to stay with the
building’s security people to make sure the orders were
followed.
Once all the remaining agents were in the
elevator, its doors closed and it shot up to the iPS USA floor.
When it arrived, it was as if the elevator belched out the eager
agents, who dashed past the shocked Clair Bourse and fanned out in
the iPS USA office in predetermined directions. Clair would have
screamed if she hadn’t been so immobilized by one of the initial
agents running directly up to her, pointing his gun at her, and
commanding, “Freeze!” The idea of the rapid, assault-like entrance
was to deny anyone the opportunity to do anything at all to any
evidence. Jacqueline, hearing the freeze command out in reception,
had reached behind her to try to close the safe but had been
specifically commanded not to do so by the two agents who had
charged into her office.
Having studied the floor plan in advance,
everyone knew exactly where to go. Stackhouse and another FBI
agent, Tony Gualario, had run directly to Benjamin Corey’s corner
office. They caught the CEO and the CFO, Carl Harris, having a
meeting.
As Stackhouse and Gualario swept into the room
with their pistols drawn, Ben started to leap to his feet.
“Remain seated!” Stackhouse commanded. He leveled
his gun at Ben, who immediately sank back into his leather desk
chair. The same thing transpired with Gualario, who was aiming his
weapon at Carl.
“Are you Benjamin Corey of five-ninety-one
Edgewood Road in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey?” Stackhouse
demanded.
“I am,” Ben said with shock that quickly changed
to fear. Suddenly he knew exactly what was happening.
“I am Special Agent Gene Stackhouse of the FBI. I
am here to execute a number of warrants, including the search of
iPS USA and seizure of all evidence pertaining to money laundering,
wire fraud, mail fraud, conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government,
and tax evasion. I also have a warrant for your arrest for
violation of the same federal statutes.”
Stackhouse paused, cleared his throat, and pulled
out a single sheet of paper from his pocket. “I have yet another
warrant for your arrest, but I better read it, since I’ve never
personally served such a warrant.” He cleared his throat again.
“Interpol arrest warrant: IP10067892431. Benjamin G. Corey of
Five-ninety-one Edgewood Road, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA.
Interpol requests the arrest and extradition from the USA to Japan
of the above named individual, pursuant to treaty arrangements
between the two countries to stand trial for first-degree murder on
or about February twenty-eighth, 2010, in the Prefecture of Kyoto,
Japan.”
“What?” Ben demanded. “I never—”
“Hold up!” Stackhouse ordered. “Don’t say
anything until I Mirandize you.”
“I found the missing lab books,” one of the FBI
agents said, coming in through the connecting door from
Jacqueline’s office and presenting them to Stackhouse.
“That’s great, George,” Stackhouse said, seeing
the two blue books and recognizing George by his voice. “The
Japanese government will be pleased. But let me finish up here
reading the Miranda rights. If you want to do something else
useful, call the other two teams and make sure their raids have
gone down as planned.”
Stackhouse cleared his throat again. He’d taken
out a three-by-five card, on which he’d written the Miranda rights,
to be sure he got them right.
“I already know my Miranda rights,” Ben groused.
He was incensed that the Japanese government would charge him with
a crime that he’d gone out of his way to try to prevent.
“I still have to read them,” Stackhouse insisted,
and he proceeded to do so, as did Tony with Carl.
After Ben and Carl had been handcuffed, George
came back into Ben’s office. “Both the other raids went
flawlessly,” he said. “All the principals have been arrested, and a
ton of evidence has been collected.”
“Perfect,” Stackhouse said. “Let’s get on with
collecting all the evidence in this office. Remember! We’re to get
everything: every computer, storage device, fax machine, and cell
phone. Plus every document, letter, or memorandum. Let’s do
it!”
APRIL 18, 2010
SUNDAY, 1:45 p.m.
NEW YORK CITY
SUNDAY, 1:45 p.m.
NEW YORK CITY
Here he comes,” Laurie said, spotting Lou
Soldano walking north on Columbus Avenue. Laurie, Jack, and JJ were
sitting at an outside table at one of their favorite haunts,
Espresso Et. Al., which was located just south of the Museum of
Natural History. Actually, only Laurie and Jack were sitting,
because JJ was, at the moment, sleeping in his reclined stroller.
Thanks to the café’s location on the east side of the avenue, it
was catching all the sunshine available on a beautiful, warm spring
day.
Laurie scraped back her metal chair and waved her
hands above her head to get Lou’s attention. Lou waved back and
adjusted his trajectory so as not to have to wade through the long
line at the café’s main entrance. Instead, he simply stepped over
the low chain stretched between potted plants that defined the
café’s outdoor terrace.
After a quick hug with Laurie and a high five
with Jack, Lou sat down in the chair saved for him. He looked like
he’d just gotten out of bed, with his hair brushed haphazardly and
his eyelids still heavy with sleep. He had, however, taken the time
to shave, and there was still a bit of shaving cream clinging to
his right earlobe.
“Thanks for coming to see us,” Laurie said.
“Thanks for inviting me,” Lou said. “I’m glad you
got me out. It’s such a beautiful day. It would have been a shame
to have wasted it vegetating on my couch, which is probably what I
would have done had you not called. So tell me, what’s this good
news you have to share? Is it what I’m hoping it is?”
“That I don’t know.” Laurie laughed. “Anyway, I’m
going back to OCME!”
“Terrific!” Lou said sincerely. He raised his
hand and high-fived Laurie. “I was hoping that was what you’d say.
Visiting OCME is just not the same if the only person I get to see
is boring old Jack. Congratulations! When is it going to
happen?”
“A week from tomorrow,” Laurie said. “The chief
has been so good about it, I can’t tell you.”
“He’s not being good, he’s being smart,” Lou
responded.
“Hear, hear!” Jack said, raising his wineglass
for a toast. Then, remembering that Lou was “wineless,” he sat up
in his chair, looking for their waitress.
“I couldn’t be happier for you,” Lou said,
leaning over toward Laurie. “Of course, that’s at least partially a
selfish response. I’ve been missing you at OCME since your
maternity leave started. But beyond being selfish, I think it is
the best decision for you and JJ. You are so good at being a
forensic pathologist, and you seem to get a lot of secondary gain
out of it. I thought you’d go back, but to be truthful, I thought
it would take more time for you to realize you could and still be a
great mom. If you don’t mind me asking, can you tell me what made
you decide so quickly?”
“It certainly wasn’t one thing, but rather a host
of things. First of all, there was the tragedy of Leticia’s death,
which I don’t want to be entirely in vain. Maybe that sounds a bit
strange, but not to me. She died because she was taking care of JJ
so I could go back to work. Somehow I think I owe it to her memory
to do it.”
“That doesn’t sound strange to me at all.”
“I also recognized that kidnapping JJ to get me
off a case was a one-in-a-million phenomenon. It’s not going to
happen again. But the most important realization is that there are
people out there who are absolutely superb nannies and love being
nannies, and have made it a true goal of being the best nannies
they can be. For me to be comfortable working, I need someone who
truly wants to be with JJ full-time and who is also willing to be
my partner so I can remain as involved as possible. Do you know
what I mean?”
“I do,” Lou said. “You need someone who will be
as good a mom and as attentive to JJ as you would be if you weren’t
going to have a career as well as be a mom. If push comes to shove,
JJ’s needs trump any career ambitions—”
Jack interrupted Lou, having gotten the attention
of the waitress. “We’re having a Vermentino. Do you want to try it,
or do you want something else? We’re also having Caesar salads with
chicken. What do you say?”
“Whatever,” Lou said with a wave. He was a
meatloaf-and-gravy sort of guy, except when he was with Jack and
Laurie. Besides, at the moment, he was more interested in the
conversation with Laurie than what kind of wine and food he wanted.
“I suppose the fact that you are coming back so quickly means you
have already found someone whom you believe fits the bill?”
“I believe I have,” Laurie admitted. “I put out a
feeler about a week ago to all my friends, particularly my college
friends, and found an Irish woman who had been the nanny for a
woman I knew in college whose two children are now teenagers. My
friend had actually been trying to find a placement for the nanny,
since she’d been so loved she’d practically become part of the
family. When I met the woman, I knew she was perfect from the very
first words out of her mouth. And she’s willing to live in. I mean,
being a nanny is her life’s mission.”
“All right! Let’s try that toast again!” Jack
said when the waitress brought Lou’s glass of Vermentino. Jack held
up his own glass of wine, and the others followed suit. “To
Laurie’s return to OCME; to JJ’s resilience, since he’s been acting
entirely normal; and to Leticia’s memory and scholarship
fund!”
The three friends clicked glasses and then took
healthy swallows of their wine.
“What’s this about a scholarship fund?” Lou asked
after putting down his wineglass.
“We tried to think of something to honor
Leticia’s memory,” Jack said. “A neighborhood college-scholarship
fund was what we came up with. Laurie has been in contact with
Columbia University, and they seem to like the idea as a nice
addition to their efforts of neighborhood outreach. Laurie and I
have already started the funding by setting up a yearly stipend and
inviting others to do the same. Plus, we’ve also started planning
various neighborhood fund-raisers. We think it will be good for the
community.”
“I couldn’t think of anything more appropriate,”
Lou said. “Great idea!”
“What’s been going on in the legal arena?” Laurie
asked. “I’ve been curious ever since you stopped by the house and
told us about the corporate raids.”
“It’s been a mixed bag, as usual,” Lou said. “All
the big honchos have been bonded from all three companies except
for Benjamin Corey. They are all to be arraigned this week and, of
course, all will plead not guilty, including Corey. What the
prosecution is doing now is putting serious rollover pressure on
the lesser officers to cop a plea in exchange for testimony on the
big guys. It’s going to work, for sure, thanks to all the evidence
obtained during the raids in unlocking the secrets involving all
the organized-crime shell companies. More important, the
comfortable relationship between the Long Island Mafia and the
Japanese Yakuza is a thing of the past, at least in the short run,
and I hope in the long run as well. Thanks to you, we are going to
see a lot less crystal meth around town.”
“Why wasn’t Benjamin Corey bonded?”
“Because of the international warrant for his
arrest on the murder charge for the security guard in Kyoto, Japan.
He would have been bonded if it had been just the white-collar
crime. If anybody is a flight risk, it’s him. Right now his biggest
effort is in trying to fight extradition. I tell you, I wouldn’t
want to be in his shoes. Even if he prevails on the extradition
issue, he’s still got to face the money-laundering charges. I mean,
I just can’t understand it. A guy with that kind of background and
education: it was as if he was trying to see just how much he could
get away with.”
“I see it more like a Greek tragedy,” Laurie
said. “The fatal flaw of greed evidencing itself in an individual
who most likely started out with an altruistic desire to help
people, just like ninety-nine percent of other medical
students.”
“But how could that happen? I don’t understand
it.”
“It’s the unfortunate marriage of medicine and
business. In the mid-twentieth century you could do well in
medicine, but you really couldn’t become truly wealthy. All that
changed when medicine in this country did not emerge as a
responsibility of government, like education or defense, as it did
in most every other industrialized country. Add to that the U.S.
government’s inadvertently contributing to medical inflation by
passing Medicare without effective cost controls, by generously
subsidizing biomedical research without maintaining ownership of
the resultant discoveries for the American public, and by its
patent office awarding medical process patents, like for human gene
sequences, which it’s not supposed to do by law. I tell you, the
medical patent situation in this country is a total mess, which is
already starting to haunt the biomedical industry, but that’s
another issue.
“Unfortunately,” Laurie continued, “today if a
doctor wants to become truly wealthy, and a lot of them do, it is
reasonably within their grasp by choosing the right specialty,
getting involved in the pharmaceutical industry, the
health-insurance industry, the specialty-hospital industry, or the
biotech industry. All these industries say they exist to help
people, which they can, but it is more of a by-product, not the
goal. The goal is to make money, and do they ever.”
For a few beats Lou merely stared at Laurie. Then
he chuckled in a mocking manner. “Do you expect me to understand
what you just said?”
“Not really,” Laurie agreed. “Just take from it
that I am not surprised that someone like Ben Corey could be
enticed from being an individual with true interests in becoming a
caring doctor to an individual whose main goal is to become a
billionaire. Most, if not all, medical students are altruistic to
begin with, but they are also competitive. They have to be, to get
into the best college, to get into medical school, and to do the
best to get the most coveted residencies to get into the best
medical specialty, meaning, most likely, the one that pays the most
so they can pay down their student loans the fastest. What they
don’t realize is that the profession in this country has
drastically changed over the years, mostly because of
economics.”
“What about the new healthcare legislation? Isn’t
that going to help?”
“In a generous moment I might say it is a start.
At its core, there is the goal of some sense of social equality in
regard to medical care as a resource and a responsibility of
government. But in this country medical care is a competitive
stakeholder industry, and the new legislation doesn’t change that;
it just re-sorts the relative power of the stakeholders. I’m afraid
the ultimate effect is going to be more pressure for costs to rise,
since, like Medicare, there aren’t enough specific cost
controls.”
“Jack, do you feel as negative as Laurie does?”
Lou asked.
“Absolutely,” Jack said without hesitation.
“Don’t get me started!”
“Let’s change the subject,” Laurie suggested.
“What about JJ’s kidnapping issue? What have you learned?”
“Well, as I mentioned when I first got here, we
now know for certain it was staged specifically to get you, Laurie,
off Satoshi Machita’s case. Ransom demands were actually a cover
for the plan. I’m also happy to report that we now have in custody
the trigger-man who killed Leticia. His name is Brennan Monaghan,
but the person really behind the event we’ve now learned is one of
the capos of the Vaccarro family named Louie Barbera, with whom I
have had run-ins in the past. I’d be ecstatic if this episode was
going to put him away, but that’s not going to be the case. Once
again, he’s going to walk.”
“How can that be?” Laurie demanded.
“From the police’s perspective, it’s the trouble
with using the likes of CRT. As we discussed that fateful night
when I introduced you to two of their principals, their primary
goal is to resolve the kidnapping to the benefit of the victim and
the victim’s family. Their methods don’t take into account that any
evidence obtained illegally is unusable in a court of law, as is
the situation in JJ’s case. CRT found out where he was being held
essentially by kidnapping and drugging a Vaccarro underling, a
hardly kosher strategy from a legal perspective. It’s a good thing
they have such good defense attorneys; otherwise, they wouldn’t
still be in business.”
“I’d rather have JJ back than have adhered to the
niceties of the law,” Laurie admitted.
“Of course you would,” Lou agreed. “That’s why I
suggested you employ them. That advice was from me as a friend, not
as a policeman. As a policeman, I wouldn’t have done it, since
their methods often trample constitutional rights, and such
behavior is certainly not good for society as a whole over the long
haul.”
“What about Vinnie Amendola?” Laurie asked. “Is
he still on the lam?”
“He’s been back for over a week,” Jack said.
“We’ve been so caught up in the scholarship and nanny business, I
forgot to tell you.”
“Thanks a lot,” Laurie said mockingly. “Well,
what’s the scoop? Is he in any kind of trouble? Did he write the
threatening letter?”
“He did,” Lou explained. “Ultimately, he’d been
found by the authories in south Florida and brought back here to
New York on a warrant. He was extremely cooperative, and no charges
have been filed even though he was an accomplice of sorts. Everyone
recognizes he was being extorted and in a difficult situation,
fearing for the lives of his daughters and wife. On top of that, he
did, after all, warn you with his letter. You’re not interested in
filing any charges, are you, Laurie?”
“Heavens, no,” Laurie said, with an expression
suggesting it was the last thing in the world she would want to do.
“I’m looking forward to thanking him for trying to warn me.”
At that point the waitress came with their Caesar
salads. Everyone pitched in to try to make room on the small
glass-topped wrought-iron table. When the waitress withdrew, Lou
raised his wineglass.
“Let me make a short toast. To forensics and what
it can do for law enforcement! It’s the one thing we have that the
bad guys don’t have!”
With nods and laughter from the three friends,
they all clicked glasses for the second time.